Search This Blog

Posts

The WTO agreement aims to simplify customs regulations for the cross-border movement of goods The Union cabinet on Wednesday approved a proposal to ratify the Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA) of the World Trade Organization, which aims to simplify customs regulations for the cro-ss-border movement of goods. To facilitate both domestic coordination and implementation of the TFA provisions, a National Committee on Trade Facilitation will be set up; it will be jointly headed by the commerce and revenue secretaries. The TFA contains provisions to speed up the movement, release and clearance of goods, including goods in transit. It also sets out measures for effective cooperation between customs and other appropriate authorities on trade facilitation and customs compliance issues. “These objectives are in consonance with India’s ‘ease of doing business’ initiative,” a cabinet statement said. The provisions that each country needs to implement have been divided into three categories. Under cat…

In what could slow down dollar inflow into the country, infrastructure and asset finance companies -including large state-owned firms like Rural Electrification Company, Power Finance Corp and Indian Railway Finance Corp -are unable to raise dollar loans, with new rules on external commercial borrowings (ECB) imposing certain restrictions. These companies, categorised as nonbanking financial companies (NBFCs) in the revised ECB framework, can only raise foreign currency loans which are denominated in rupees. In such loans, lenders take the foreign currency risk -unlike the customary dollar loans where the risk arising out of exchange rate fluctuation lies with borrowers. But, under the current circumstances, where the market has turned volatile and the local currency is depreciating, these companies are finding it impossible to raise rupee-denominated ECB.And, even if they can, the pricing of such borrowings would be prohibitive. Since the beginning of 2016, a little less than $2 billion…

Experts say move to raise period from one to three years could scare markets The already- nervous Street has a new reason to lose sleep. The plan proposed by the government to increase the time frame of long- term capital gains tax from one year to three years has made the stock market investors nervous in the run- up to the Union Budget. Capital gains are the profits that an investor realises when he sells a stock. Long- term capital gains tax is a levy on those gains.Currently, investors dont have to pay any capital gains tax on shares sold on an exchange after one year of holding. The move to increase the holding period to three years would force investors to hold on to their stocks, hurt sentiment, and lead to a crash in the market, say experts. Benchmark indices are already down 10 per cent this year following a rout in the global markets. Sudip Bandyopadhyay, managing director and chief executive, Destimoney Securities, believes such a move would be "disastrous". "The…

The upcoming Budget for 2016-17 would focus on tax rationalisation and simplification besides providing a level-playing field to domestic manufacturers to facilitate Make in India, hinted revenue secretary Hasmukh Adhia on Wednesday. With a fortnight to go for finance minister Arun Jaitley to present the Budget, Adhia said the focus should be on promoting growth and employment. "The focus of the Budget should be on tax rationalisation and simplification. …promoting growth, employment and providing some sort of level-playing field to domestic manufacturers so that the Make In India can happen," Adhia said in the finance ministry's YouTube video. On the need for phasing out of corporate tax exemptions, which cost the exchequer about Rs 2 lakh crore annually, Adhia said the move was necessary to provide a level-playing field to domestic manufacturing companies even though completely eliminating those was not possible. "Exemptions create inequity, between the existing unit …